🧵 In the 1920s, a brilliant philosopher named Edith Stein, later murdered at Auschwitz and now a Saint, asked the question that might save us from AI:
"How can I truly know that someone else is a 'self' like me?"
Stein's analysis is urgently needed. Here's why: 🧵⤵️
The tech bros building our AI future want us to abandon empathy.
Because empathy is the firewall: Without it, we become programmable objects in an economy that profits from stealing our most sacred resource: our attention. ⤵️
MAGA preachers, perhaps paid by the tech bros, are calling empathy a sin.
But empathy isn’t surrender of the self. It's the opposite! ⤵️
Empathy is how we know someone else is real. It's how we know ourselves. Edith Stein, before Hitler killed her, pointed the way. ⤵️
In our attention economy, which Stein amazingly anticipated, we're losing our sense of self.
The TikToks in our palm feel as real as our neighbors.
Everything we experience, even dreaming, is REAL to us, because it's part of our experience. ⤵️
But without analytical empathy, we lose our sense of self. We need to understand whether emotions felt are OURS—or those of others.
Empathy is precisely about finding the line between SELF and OTHER. It is not, as Elon suggests, erasing your own identity. ⤵️
Edith Stein's 1916 breakthrough: Empathy is a rigorous act of consciousness that:
—Aims at the other (it's intentional)
—Preserves distance (doesn't collapse you into others, @elonmusk)
—Lets you grasp another's experience directly—but in a mediated way ⤵️
Stein’s process is the transcendental reduction:
1. Suspend bias: Observe how the other appears.
2. Reduce: Focus on what’s given in experience—face, tone, gesture.
3. See their feelings—which you know to be human from your experience—as theirs, not yours.
That’s empathy. ⤵️
Stein solves the "problem of other minds" that had stumped philosophers, including her mentor Husserl, for centuries.
You don't deduce that others have consciousness. You don't imagine it. You directly apprehend it through empathy—
Today this is THE necessary science. ⤵️
Stein gave us the criteria for recognizing genuine consciousness:
Can this Other be the subject of empathic perception?
Not "does it simulate emotions" but "can I encounter it as another I?" ⤵️
Pope Leo said he chose his name because of AI's rise.
The previous Pope Leo in the 19th century guided the world through industrialization. Now, Leo XIV wants to help us navigate the new things.
Stein's work on consciousness and empathy feels designed for this exact moment. ⤵️
Edith Stein was murdered at Auschwitz in 1942.
Before that, this Jewish philosopher became a Catholic nun, Teresa Benedicta of the Cross. Pope John Paul II later named her one of Europe's six patron saints—the only one from the 20th century. ⤵️
Empathy disrupts control.
It asks dangerous questions:
Who made this system?
Who’s being erased?
Who still matters?
That’s why the globalist power lords want you to hate empathy.
To call it a sin. A liability. ⤵️
Here in wartime Ukraine, I have been attentively reading Stein's On the Problem of Empathy—which I have realized is the best tool to help me speak to people in far away USA about the reality here in Ukraine.
🧵 Did the U.S. Constitution Begin in Ukraine? 🇺🇦📜🇺🇸
It sounds wild. But follow this fascinating thread: from a Ukrainian hetman-in-exile in Sweden ... to Voltaire ... to Montesquieu... to Philadelphia 1787. 🧵⤵️
1. Pylyp Orlyk was born in 1672 to a Kozak noble family.
Educated at the Kyiv Mohyla Academy (📸), fluent in Latin, he became chief advisor to Ivan Mazepa — Hetman of the Ukrainian Zaporizhzhian Host, which was the Kozak free state in the wild steppes. ⤵️
2. In 1709, after Russia defeated Mazepa’s alliance with Sweden, Orlyk fled to Stockholm.
There, he was elected Hetman in exile by fellow Kozaks, with the support of Swedish King Charles XII — whose rowing ancestors, the “Rus,” had helped developed Kyiv centuries earlier. ⤵️
🧵 10 Things I’ve Learned Reporting From Ukraine (That No One Wants to Say)
➡️ Azov isn’t Nazi.
➡️ Ukrainians try harder for peace than anyone.
➡️ The White House is in the dark — and Kyiv doesn’t know it; and more!
Let's take a look! Strong responses welcome! 🧵⤵️
1. The places closest to Russia in Ukraine are the most defiantly Ukrainian.
Kharkiv, 30 miles from Russia, where people once spoke Russian every day, is where you will find the strongest daily resistance to Russian tyranny. ⤵️
2. Burisma is Russian, not Ukrainian.
The energy firm that hired Hunter Biden was led by an ex-member of Yanukovych’s Moscow-aligned government. The fact that Americans on BOTH the left and right still call it “Ukrainian corruption” makes the Kremlin happy. ⤵️
Did you know Ukraine has majestic castles that guarded the gates of Europe? Here are 11 story-laden fortresses🏰 🧵
1. Kamianets-Podilskyi, "The Stones of Podilia," 14th c.: It blocked Tatar and Ottoman sieges. In 1672, it briefly fell to the latter. 📍 Khmelnytskyi region ⤵️
2. Palanok Castle, Mukachevo (14th century) 🛡️
Once held by the Transylvanian princess Ilona Zrínyi, who resisted a Habsburg siege in 1685, it's built atop an extinct volcano in quaint Mukachevo. It secretly held the Holy Crown of Hungary for a few months in 1806. 📍 Zakarpattia ⤵️
3. Olesko Castle (13th century) ⚔️
Birthplace of Polish King Jan III Sobieski, the hero of the Battle of Vienna which saved Europe from the Ottomans. Olesko was damaged by Mongol raids in the 1200s and rebuilt by Lithuanian nobles.📍 Lviv region ⤵️
The beautiful Catholic churches of Lviv, Ukraine. 🧵
1. The Greek-rite Church of the Holy Eucharist (1749). Under Moscow Soviet control until 1991, it was the Museum of Atheism. ⤵️
2. The Latin Cathedral (1360): the seat of the Latin-rite archbishop of Lviv. ⤵️
3. The Garrison Church of Sts Peter and Paul (1610): the site of daily military funerals. The Soviets made it into a library; it was restored after Ukrainian independence. ⤵️
🧵 Ted Cruz vs. Tucker Carlson on Ukraine was a disaster, for Ukraine.
Cruz supports Ukraine in the main — but failed to make the case. And in doing so, made Ukraine look weak.
So here are the answers I wish he delivered. 🧵👇
I’ve spent the past 1100+ days reporting from Ukraine.
If I knew nothing about this war, and only watched the Cruz-Tucker interview, I’d think Tucker won.
That’s how bad Cruz was, in the style of American elites who just blab without making the effort to be accurate.
But Tucker’s questions matter — because they reflect what many Americans believe.⤵️
Tucker: Wasn't the 2014 Maidan Revolution just a US-backed coup?
Cruz: [Mumbles something about pipelines.]
Better answer:
No. In fact, meddling U.S. officials including Victoria Nuland were trying to get the protestors to make a deal with the pro-Kremlin regime. Because Washington never likes too much freedom!
It was Ukrainians who revolted — like Canada’s truckers but braver and bloodier. ⤵️
Ukraine supporters: You're sabotaging the cause by misunderstanding America and Trump.
Just look at how his MAGA base has revolted when he backs Israel and the Iranian opposition against the mullahs. Imagine if he backed Ukraine—the backlash would be 10x worse!
You think you just need to convince Trump. You're wrong. Here's what you're missing 🧵1/6 ⤵️
You assume Trump operates like establishment politicians—top-down, ignoring voters. You come up with conspiracy theories that he is Putin's pup.
That thinking is WHY you can't persuade him.
Trump won by channeling and respecting his base's mood. And the mood toward Ukraine is not good. ⤵️
Consider: Trump it seems has decided to make a move against the Iranian mullahs.
But he knows he needs to keep MAGA happy. So, he has JD Vance, who is the chief representative in the White House of the American Heartland views, step in to make the case to the people.